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Basal membrane heparan sulphate proteoglycan expression during wound healing in human skin

✍ Scribed by Andriessen, Monique P.; Van Den Born, Jaap; Latijnhouwers, Mieke A.; Bergers, Mieke; Van De Kerkhof, Peter C.; Schalkwijk, Joost


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1997
Tongue
English
Weight
547 KB
Volume
183
Category
Article
ISSN
0022-3417

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✦ Synopsis


Heparan sulphate proteoglycans (HSPGs) are integral components of the basement membrane (BM) in various tissues. HSPGs are important in the assembly and structure of the BM, and their putative functions include regulation of basement membrane permeability, binding of growth factors, and a role in cellular adhesion. In this study the expression of HSPG was examined during wound healing in human skin, using monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) that recognize the HSPG core protein and two different heparan sulphate (HS) epitopes, and the dynamics of HSPG expression were investigated in relation to epidermal cellular proliferation and permeability of the BM. Healing of excisional wounds in healthy volunteers was studied from day 0 up to 1 year. Intact human skin showed strong continuous staining of the dermo-epidermal BM and the vascular BM with all MAbs. Up to day 4 after wounding, staining for HSPG was absent under the ingrowing epidermis, with any of the MAbs, indicating that no complete BM was present. From day 7 onwards, the BM of the neo-epidermis showed positive staining for the HSPG core protein and a low sulphated HS epitope, and after day 14, the staining intensity was similar to normal skin. The staining patterns of these HSPG epitopes were similar to that of laminin. The staining pattern with a MAb against an epitope in the highly sulphated part of HS was found to be distinct from the other BM markers studied. This epitope was absent under the neo-epidermis up to 2 months after wounding. One year after wounding, the epitope was found to be present again. We observed that only in the time period between 2 months and 1 year had the epidermis normalized with respect to the number of cycling cells and the absence of high molecular weight plasma proteins. These findings suggest a correlation between normalization of epidermal proliferation, BM permeability, and regeneration of BM HS. It is proposed that complete BM maturation following skin wounding is a slow process and may account for the epidermal abnormalities that persist for a considerable period of time after wound healing.


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